Peloton must face U.S. lawsuit over availability of fitness classes

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The lawsuit stemmed from Peloton’s March 2019 decision to purge more than half of its estimated 12,000 on-demand classes, after music publishers sued the company for using copyrighted songs in its workout videos without proper licensing.

Customers said the New York-based company knew this could happen, yet kept charging full price for bicycles and monthly subscriptions that included infringing songs from Beyoncé, Luke Bryan, Madonna, Justin Timberlake, Jay Z and others.

In a 40-page decision, U.S. District Judge Lewis Liman in Manhattan said Peloton customers could try to prove that they overpaid because of the company’s failing to disclose the “imminent” removal of much of its on-demand library.

Peloton did not immediately respond to requests for comment. Lawyers for the customers did not immediately respond to similar requests.